In him we live and move and have our being.

Saturday. 5/28/16

In our Responsorial Psalm we implore: “O God, you are my God whom I seek; for you my flesh pines and my soul
thirsts like the earth, parched, lifeless, and without water.”

That Psalm reminds me of a book written by Father Henri de
Lubac S.J. He was a heroic priest who in World War Two worked in the French Underground
saving Jewish people. Then, at war’s end in 1945, he published the book he had
been working on during the five years while he was on the run from the Nazis.

The name of the book was, “On Discovering God.”

You would think that after all Father Lubac had been through
in two World Wars, it was a bit late for him to be discovering God. But what
Father Lubac was saying was that while we say our Rosaries, and get Anthony’s
help finding our keys, and ask Christopher to keep us safe on the road, we just
leave God stuck up there in heaven.

In calling himself, “The Way,” Jesus was telling us that not
himself, but God must be at the core of our religious life. “No one comes to
the Father except through me.”

St.
Paul wrote, “In him we live, and move, and have our being.” Let’s not ignore
that. Strain to consciously live in him,
move in him, and to have your being in God.